Influence of sampling points on CV intra [Study As­sess­ment]

posted by Helmut Homepage – Vienna, Austria, 2014-04-01 02:54 (4473 d 05:45 ago) – Posting: # 12747
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¡Hola Averroes!

❝ Do you think poor frequency of blood sampling could have influenced CV intra?


Absolutely! Like all bisposphonates alendronate has (very!) low and highly variable absorption, spiced with lag-times. With too few sampling time points we might get a biased estimates of the Cmax-ratio in individual subjects. Regularly missing the ‘true’ Cmax directly translates into an increased CVintra. See this example (slides 44–45).
Now your colleague learned the hard way one of the purposes of a pilot study (nicely outlined by the [image] FDA):

[…] a pilot study in a small number of subjects […] can be used to validate analytical metho­do­logy, assess vari­ability, optimize sample collection time intervals, and provide other infor­ma­tion. For example, for conventional immediate-release products, careful timing of initial samples may avoid a subsequent finding in a full-scale study that the first sample collection occurs after the plasma concentration peak. For modified-release products, a pilot study can help determine the sampling schedule to assess lag time and dose dumping.

(my emphasis)

BTW, since alendronate is well known to be a HVD, n=12 is too small by far – if he/she wanted to get reliable estimates of the ratios and CVs for sample size estimation. IMHO, alendronate would be a candi­date for reference-scaling (ABEL). In that case the pilot study should be performed in a replicate design.

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